France's Macron gets rough ride in Le Pen country

Emmanuel Macron has been urged to come out punching (AFP Photo/PHILIPPE HUGUEN)

Amiens
(France) (AFP) - French presidential frontrunner Emmanuel Macron vowed
Wednesday not to "yield a centimetre" to Marine Le Pen after being booed
and heckled with chants backing his far-right rival during a chaotic
visit to an under-threat factory in the nation's rustbelt.

"We
have two projects for the country going head to head against one
another," said Macron as he visited a cafe in the northern village of
Bully-les-Mines.

"So I shall not cede a centimetre of space, not a second's respite, not an ounce of energy," to Le Pen, Macron insisted.

Earlier,
Le Pen had stolen some of the pro-European candidate's thunder by
visiting workers hours ahead of him at the same factory in his northern
home town of Amiens.

Macron
was booed and heckled as he made a chaotic visit to the under-threat
factory in the nation's depressed northern rustbelt where Le Pen topped
first round voting.

Some
in the crowd shouted "President Marine!" and booed as the 39-year-old
former banker arrived outside the Whirlpool appliance factory in Amiens,
where Le Pen had already made an unannounced stop.

US multinational Whirlpool runs the facility which is threatened with outsourcing to Poland.

"Of
course there is anger in this country, there is anxiety. Responsibility
must be taken, that's why I'm here," pro-business former economy
minister Macron told workers.

Macron
tried to counter accusations that he had made a complacent start to
campaigning for the presidential runoff on May 7 after finishing ahead
of Le Pen, 48, in Sunday's first round.

While
Macron had arranged to meet Whirlpool workers' union representatives
without actually visiting the plant, Le Pen turned up unannounced
outside the plant and posed for selfies with workers and attacked her
rival.

"Everyone
knows what side Emmanuel Macron is on -- he is on the side of the
corporations," Le Pen said. "I am on the workers' side, here in the car
park, not in restaurants in Amiens."

As
news broke of the Le Pen visit, Macron announced he would also meet
employees, telling them the only reason that the anti-EU Le Pen had come
was "because I'm here".

He
also retorted on Twitter that she had spent "10 minutes with her
supporters in a car park in front of the cameras" whereas he had spent
"an hour and a half with union representatives and no media."

A
Wednesday poll suggested Macron will defeat Le Pen by a margin of 21
points, but as the day's events showed, the far-right candidate is a
vastly more experienced political campaigner.

And
after the shocks of Britain's vote to leave the European Union and
Donald Trump's unlikely ascent to the White House, analysts say a late
surge by Le Pen is still possible.

Macron's
visit north came as a Harris Interactive poll showed 52 percent of the
French believe he botched the start of campaigning for the run-off.

After
winning Sunday's contest with 24.1 percent to Le Pen's 21.3 percent,
Macron gave an exuberant victory speech followed by a high-profile
celebration at a Paris restaurant, drawing criticism from some quarters.

Socialist
Party boss Jean-Christophe Cambadelis told French radio: "He was smug.
He wrongly thought that it was a done deal. It's not a done deal."

President
Francois Hollande appeared on Tuesday to admonish his former economy
minister for not taking the fight to Le Pen immediately after the first
round.

"I will defend the progressive camp to the end," Macron retorted.

- 'Not a single vote' -

Since
securing her berth in the run-off, Le Pen has turbo-charged her
campaign with a string of appearances and statements, leaving her
opponent on the back foot.

In
contrast, her opponent convened strategy meetings about June's
legislative elections that will determine the shape of a future Macron
government.

Le
Pen will hold a rally in the Riviera city of Nice on Thursday, a
bastion of France's right that was targeted by a jihadist-inspired truck
attack that killed 86 people last July.

Le
Pen has called for France to take back control of its borders from the
European Union and deport all foreigners on a terror watchlist, accusing
Macron of being soft on security.

A
key factor in the race is which candidate the supporters of
Communist-backed Jean-Luc Melenchon, who finished in fourth place with
19.58 percent on Sunday, will now back.

Melenchon
faced criticism after he failed to urge his backers to get behind
Macron as part of the so-called "republican front", the decades-old
French tactic of closing ranks to block the far-right.

But
Melenchon's spokesman Alexis Corbiere told French TV channel LCI that
"for us the National Front is a danger" and urged viewers to not give "a
single vote to the National Front."

Meanwhile
in Paris, thousands of French police demonstrated in the Champs
Elysees, where one of their number was killed by a jihadist six days
earlier, to urge both candidates to "hear their anger" over difficult
working conditions.

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Le Pen's father criticizes her presidential campaign as she steps back from party

French
far-right veteran Jean-Marie Le Pen said on Tuesday his daughter Marine,
who faces centrist Emmanuel Macron in a May 7 presidential runoff,
should have campaigned more aggressively for Sunday's first round,
following the example of Donald Trump.With
7.5 million votes, Marine Le Pen beat the National Front party's
previous election record on Sunday but failed to pip pro-EU Macron to
the first place.The intervention
by her father follows her announcement on Monday that she plans to step
back from day-to-day management of the far-right party he founded ahead
of the runoff and marks the latest tussle between the two of them over
its future direction."I think her
campaign was too laid-back. If I'd been in her place I would have had a
Trump-like campaign, a more open one, very aggressive against those
responsible for the decadence of our country, whether left or right,"
88-year-old Jean-Marie Le Pen told RTL radio.The
two have been at odds since Marine Le Pen launched moves to clean the
National Front's image of xenophobic associations in the run-up to the
campaign for the 2017 presidency.

Marine Le Pen (L), French National Front
(FN) political party candidate for French 2017 presidential election,
speaks with employees as she visits the meat pavilion at the Rungis
international food market, near Paris, during her campaign, France,
April 25, 2017.
REUTERS/Charles Platiau

Jean-Marie Le
Pen shocked the world in 2002 by qualifying for the second round of the
presidential election and then went on to lose in a landslide to
conservative Jacques Chirac.He was
frequently accused of making xenophobic and anti-Semitic statements and
Le Pen expelled him from the party in 2015, though as the party's
founder he remains a well-known figure and represents a body of opinion
in the party. In
another sign of his influence, the National Front has borrowed about 6
million euros from a political fundraising association he heads.Marine
Le Pen's decision to take a leave of absence from the day-to-day
management of the party appeared to be an attempt to portray herself as
being above the narrow world of National Front politics and broaden her
appeal to the wider electorate ahead of the crucial runoff vote.Her
program calls for sharp curbs on immigration and on the rights of
immigrants living in France, as well as the expulsion of foreigners
under suspicion of having militant Islamist links.

But
she is seeking all the same to distance herself from the toxic legacy
of her father and the xenophobic and anti-semitic undertones of his
previous campaigns.Under France's
Fifth Republic, the president is the head of state, very much like a
monarch in other countries, a role described by founder Charles De
Gaulle as being above party politics - something Le Pen may have had in
mind in her Monday night statement.She
may also be seeking to play Macron at his own game, as the 39-year old
centrist has refused to join mainstream parties, and consistently
described his "En Marche!" (Onwards!) party structure as a "movement"
transcending the left-right divide.http://www.reuters.com/article/us-france-election-idUSKBN17R0YW?il=0

Monday, April 24, 2017

France election - down to Le Pen and Macron

Whilst we have our own reservations about Le Pen . Macron is just another of the global elites failures in the making. No doubt all the rest of the liberal elite internationalist and globalist failures in France will now 'gang- up' on Le Pen . Most if not all of our readers will already know about Le Pen . But who is Macron ?

He joined the civil service in 2004 and quit for a job with (((Rothschild))) investment bank in 2008.Reportedly becoming a millionaire, he left in 2012 for a senior
position in Mr Hollande’s staff, deputy secretary-general at the Elysee
Palace.His climb up the establishment ladder continued in 2014 when then prime minister Manuel Valls made him minister for the economy.Mr Macron’s bid for the presidency began last year when he ditched Mr
Hollande’s Socialist Party and established his own independent
movement, En Marche! (On the Move).He recruited thousands of volunteers to knock on doors during the
summer to hear people’s ideas and opinions and En Marche! has whipped up
impressive support.For the first time, a recent poll put him just ahead of Marine Le Pen
in the first round of the election in April. In the second round head
to head against the far-right candidate, he is predicted to win 65% to
25%.Mr Macron’s surge and his belief in the EU and a strong Europe has made him a “fake news” target for Russian media, his party chief claims.

Hello hello hello !

Another from behind the scenes controlled organisation/party ?

Do we need three guesses who will be, and have been financing Macron ?

Can Le Pen win ? Well it is possible.

But we think it is now unlikely. So it's more of the same for France !

Growing from the Trump election and now seeming betrayal, a lot of these people have been mobilised by that election.

They are getting mighty-ly 'pissed off ' as the betrayal by Trump gathers pace.

They have just realised that 'Anti-Fa' are very vicious communist bastards who are the 'bootboys' and thugs for the 'ruling elites'. This growth of a USA 'Anti- Antifa' is welcome. More astute US patriots need to do some homework on places like this country or Germany as examples, where we have had to struggle with these underworld criminal types operating for years.

Sunday, April 23, 2017

This is
a flap election, not a snap election. It has been called to get the
Government out of what might be serious legal trouble. I am amazed this
has not attracted more attention.

It is
this simple. The Crown Prosecution Service is now looking at the cases
of 30, yes 30, Tory MPs and agents, who have been investigated for
breaking spending rules at the last General Election.

The allegations have been probed by 14 police forces after claims that the Conservatives’ ‘battlebus’ campaign broke legal spending limits in several key marginal seats.

+3

Britain's Prime Minster Theresa May delivers a speech at Netherton Conservative Club during the election campaign

The
Tories have already been in deep trouble over their new election
techniques, where busloads of outsiders flood into winnable seats to
round up crucial extra votes. This was a way of making up for the Tory
party’s severe loss of active members, who used to do this donkey work.
But it is sailing very close to the legal wind.

Last
month they were hit by the Electoral Commission with a record £70,000
fine – the maximum – for failing to declare their spending. The forces
involved are Avon & Somerset, Cumbria, Derbyshire, Devon &
Cornwall, Gloucestershire, Greater Manchester, Lincolnshire,
Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire, West Mercia, West
Midlands, West Yorkshire and the Met.

These
cases are likely to result in some charges (I have no idea how many) in
the next few weeks, probably just before polling day. Trials, assuming
these go ahead, will be much later in the year and might not reach
verdicts until well into 2018.

If
there had been no election, any convictions could have meant MPs found
guilty being forced to stand down, and elections being rerun. A General
Election makes this much less of a threat, especially if Mrs May manages
to increase her meagre majority.

This menace has been worrying the
Cabinet for some months, as it has become clear it will not go away. And
it is a far better explanation of the Prime Minister’s change of heart
than her rather weird and incoherent speech in Downing Street. I happen
to think she is a naturally truthful person and meant what she said when
she previously declared several times that she was going to stay on
till 2020.

But the expenses
allegations, which started as a cloud on the horizon no bigger than a
man’s hand, have grown and grown. I suspect her advisers have been
telling her she cannot risk them coming into the open late in a
Parliament when, perhaps, the economy is not doing well, or EU
negotiations are going badly or Labour has a new leader.

As
a result of this semi-secret crisis, the Tory campaign this time will
have to be a good deal more cautious about such things, which may weaken
it, especially if the campaign goes wrong – and this is not
impossible.

Even now the affair could
be highly damaging – but early in a new Parliament, with a secure
majority, the Government should be able to weather it far better than if
Mrs May had soldiered on. But all elections are risks. It is amazing
how often governments lose control of them.

Politics in this country are a good deal less solid and stable than they seem.

German anti-immigrant party set to go further right after leader suffers defeat

German anti-immigrant party set to go further right after leader suffers defeat

By Michelle Martin

COLOGNE,
Germany (Reuters) - The co-leader of the anti-immigrant Alternative for
Germany (AfD) suffered an embarrassing defeat on Saturday when
delegates refused to discuss her motion to shift the party into the
"mainstream", putting it on course to turn further right.

The
party, a pariah in German politics, has seen its support drop in recent
months, and thousands turned up to protest the congress and the party's
anti-immigrant stance.

Frauke
Petry, the AfD's public face, shocked supporters on Wednesday by
announcing that she would not lead the AfD's campaign for a Sept. 24
federal election.

She
had ruffled feathers by proposing to rebrand the AfD as a party that
would seek to join coalitions from 2021 elections rather than becoming a
"fundamental" opposition party. All established parties refuse to work
with the AfD.

Petry
said she was prepared to edit the text with her arch-rival Alexander
Gauland, whom she upset by naming as the key proponent of the
"fundamental" opposition camp. Her foes within the party say the
division laid out in her motion is artificial.

But
delegates stressed the need to use the congress in Cologne to signal
the AfD was united ahead of the elections after months of bitter
infighting that have helped drag down its poll ratings by about
one-third to 8-10 percent.

They
voted against discussing Petry's motion or another proposal in which
she and others said the AfD should reject "racist, anti-Semitic ... and
nationalist ideologies".

Speaking
after the vote, Petry said the AfD had made a "mistake" and added that
those acquainted with the party since it was founded in 2013 knew that
it was "exactly this lack of strategy" that was behind much of its
internal strife.

"As
long as the party does not indicate which direction it actually wants
to go in, protagonists who can live with this non-decision a lot better
than I can have to lead this election campaign," Petry said, adding that
she would however do her bit to make the AfD successful.

Co-leader
Joerg Meuthen gained wild applause - and a standing ovation from some -
for saying the AfD would never form an alliance with the likes of
Chancellor Angela Merkel, Social Democrat leader Martin Schulz or the
Greens, who he said were wrecking Germany with their pro-migrant
stances.

Around
10-15,000 protesters demonstrated against the AfD's meeting in Cologne,
a police spokesman told broadcaster n-tv - well below initial
expectations that 50,000 could turn up. Two police officers were injured
and a police car was set ablaze.

Delegates
also voted on Saturday in favor of having a team of national candidates
for the election campaign despite Petry warning against such a
strategy. The line-up is due to be decided on during the congress.

In
a firebrand speech, economics professor Meuthen said Germans were
increasingly "few and far between" and that without action now, "the
irrevocable change of our homeland into a Muslim-dominated country is a
mathematical certainty".

Many of the more than one million migrants who have arrived in Germany in the last two years are Muslims.

Meuthen
said he was not xenophobic but was concerned about the extent to which
migrants were changing Germany and that Germans did not want to become a
minority in their own country.

He likened the country to the Titanic.

"Everybody
is still in good spirits and there's a relaxed party mood above and
below deck but it's almost impossible for the huge ship to make the
necessary change in direction anymore," Meuthen said. "People can't or
don't want to imagine a collision with an iceberg but it's already
unavoidable."

Thousands of furious veterans take to Britain's streets in protest
against the 'witch hunt' prosecutions of soldiers who served in the
Northern Ireland Troubles

The event is running alongside simultaneous protests in Glasgow and Belfast

It is against the alleged 'witch-hunt' of soldiers who served during the Troubles

Scores of soldiers are being prosecuted for crimes decades on from the conflict

Thousands
of veterans took to the streets of some of the UK's major cities to
protest the 'witch hunt' prosecutions of veterans who served in the
Troubles.

Ex-servicemen dressed in
ceremonial ties and berets from several regiments gathered in London,
Belfast and Glasgow, four days after the nineteenth anniversary of the
historic Good Friday agreements.

Tensions ran high on Friday morning in the Northern Irish capital, following counter-protests by hardline republicans.

+16

British military veterans hold a
rally near the Mall in London following the prosecution of
ex-servicemen who fought in the Troubles

+16

Dennis Hutchings, who is facing a
charge of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm in relation to a
fatal shooting in 1974, addresses the crowd in London

+16

400 Northern Ireland army
veterans from Justice for Northern Ireland Veterans take to the street
of Glasgow during a simultaneous protest

+16

And the supporters of British
troops were also out in force in Belfast, where Union Jacks can be seen
being waved, as the crowds cheer

The demonstration was organised by British military campaign group, Justice For Northern Ireland Veterans (JFNIV).

The
group claims a series of high-profile prosecutions and investigations
into alleged abuses by British soldiers in Northern Ireland amount to an
unjust 'hounding' of servicemen compared with the Government's
treatment of former IRA members.

Among
those who addressed the crowds adjacent to the capital's royal
thoroughfare, the Mall, was former soldier Dennis Hutchings, who is
facing a charge of attempting to cause grievous bodily harm in relation
to a fatal shooting in 1974.

JFNIV
organiser Alan Barry said he was pleased with the show of support from
the estimated 3,000 people attending at the London event, at Horse
Guards Parade.

Mr Barry, who is a
Northern Ireland veteran of the Grenadier Guards, said the group always
agreed that genuine crimes should be prosecuted, but said the majority
of investigations into alleged abuses were unfounded.

He said: 'No soldier ever left barracks with the intention of committing murder.

'When we left barracks, we left barracks on patrol, and if we were fired at, we fired back.'

+16

Protesters also gathered at a simultaneous military veterans' rally at Horse Guards Parade, in London

+16

More crowds in London, dressed smartly in suits or military uniform, holding up banners in protest of the prosecutions

+16

Around 3,000 people took to the
streets of the British capital, in addition to the other two
demonstrations. Many can be seen waving flags as they march along

+16

Protesters line up along Whitehall. JFNIV organiser Alan Barry said he was pleased with the show of support

+16

The procession can be seen here playing the drums and playing the bagpipes as they march down Whitehall

Mr Barry said the group's 'next mission' will be to march on Stormont if the Government continued to pursue prosecutions.

After
hearing from political activists and former soldiers, the gathered
ranks of supporters arranged in a column and marched to the Cenotaph,
where a rendition of the Last Post was played against a swell of bank
holiday traffic.

Mr Hutchings said he was 'absolutely gutted' to be facing trial.

The
75-year-old, from Torpoint in Cornwall, said: 'Of course I'm feeling
nervous about it because you don't know what way it's going to go.'

In Glasgow, the group of nearly 300 veterans lined up in George Square before beginning their march through the city.

Paisley
Comrades Pipe Band led the procession, with some marchers holding
banners reading ‘Justice for Northern Ireland Veterans.’

+16

More protesters - these from the
Ulster Defence Regiment - at the military veterans' rally at City Hall,
Belfast, organised by Justice for Northern Ireland Veterans

+16

But hardline Republicans held a counter demonstration against the military veterans' rally outside City Hall, Belfast

+16

Dissident republican Colin Duffy
(centre) with republicans during the counter demonstration. They feel
the prosecutions are just, and can be seen with signs saying 'British
state murderers have Irish blood on their hands'

+16

Further signs at the counter protest can be seen with the slogans such as 'Brit paras shot my daddy'

+16

The two opposing sides clashing in the same area in Belfast required a large police presence

Bookended
by two police vans, a small group of police officers walked along with
the march to help control the increasing traffic.

Good Friday shoppers on Buchanan Street and Argyle Street stopped to watch and take photos of the march.

One of those marching was Steve Simpson, ex-First Battalion Scots Guard.

He
said: ‘We feel that the government has let us down. We followed what we
were supposed to do and now we’re being persecuted for it. Until our
voice is heard we will keep marching.’

Another
ex-soldier, John Hunter of the Edinburgh Regiment, wore his medals
proudly on his chest and said: ‘The witch hunt that’s going on in
Norther Ireland is unacceptable. They’re dragging 68 year olds into
court. They pardoned the IRA in the Easter Sunday agreement. It really
is like a witch hunt.’

Coming in a full
circle, the veterans marched back up Queen Street and onto George
Square where they gathered to listen to speaker Kenny Corcoran.

Mr
Corcoran from Motherwell, North Lanarkshire, helped organise the march
and served in the Core of Royal Engineers from 1977 to 1992.

He
spoke passionately to the attentive crowd and said: ‘No service person
ever threw a bomb into a chip shop full of women and kids. No service
person ever enticed three young men from a pub, take them down and
slaughter them and left them at the side of the road for school kids to
find in the morning.

‘Soldiers are not
above the law by any means, but the law has thoroughly investigated
these cases at the time. These surges have been brought to appease the
Sinn Fein, IRA.

+16

The demonstration was organised
by British military campaign group, Justice For Northern Ireland
Veterans, some of whom are seen here holding up a banner

+16

More crowds in the streets of Glasgow protesting against the 'witch-hunt' prosecutions of former soldiers

‘Any
judge who takes these cases will be under the ultimate pressure from
Sinn Fein, IRA, to bring a guilty verdict against our soldiers.’

In his speech he referenced the letter given by MP John Reid to Tony Blair as part of the Good Friday agreement.

Mr
Corcoran said: ‘In that letter it clearly stated that the agreement
would not extend to her majesties forces. We want to know if this
information was hidden from the government of the day to push the
agreement through and leaving us wide open to allegations and
prosecutions.

‘Be under no allusion
gents, every Norther Ireland veteran is under the microscope, but like
the triggers, we will not go away. We will fight this government tooth
and nail, we will parade in every major town and city of Britain until
the people of this island realise what effect a witch hunt like this has
on us. And until the people of this island stand behind us and stop all
of these prosecutions.

‘Margaret
Thatcher would turn in her grave if she could see what was happening to
her boys. Ladies and gents I thank you warmly for coming today and
showing the government that we will not take this lying down and we
certainly will not go away.’

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

'Manchester United can afford it', says judge as he lets off thieving burger kiosk workers

The kiosk workers were caught stealing money and hiding it down their trousers

The seven were linked to around £600 taken when Old Trafford hosted a rugby league match (Photo: Manchester Evening News)

Seven
former Manchester United workers caught taking money from the tills
celebrated outside court when a judge who could have jailed them handed
them an official slap on the wrist instead.
Judge Paul Lawton
questioned why the £598 theft case ended up at the crown court and
asked: “Manchester United can just about afford it, can’t they?”
The
seven defendants, who feared they would be locked up, shared smiles
with each other and with friends and family after they were each handed a
12-month conditional discharge. Secret cameras were installed at an Old Trafford
burger stand after bosses noticed takings were down, and the footage
captured the casual employees helping themselves to the takings.

Mwila Bwanga and Olamide Oyawoye (Photo: Manchester Evening News) Last month District Judge Mark Hadfield, sitting at
Manchester and Salford Magistrates’ Court, decided his sentencing powers
- up to 12 months behind bars - weren’t enough and he sent the case to
Manchester’s Minshull Street Crown Court. On Wednesday at the higher court, Judge Paul Lawton
described the decision as ‘remarkable’ before hearing an outline of the
case.
Prosecutor Timothy Greenald said all seven defendants had
been employed by United on a casual basis for matches and other events
in a kiosk in the lower east stand at Old Trafford.

Fliavio Andrade (Photo: Manchester Evening News) Team leader Fliavio Andrade and six staff under him were
caught ‘taking cash from the tills and concealing it in their pockets or
down the front of their trousers’, said Mr Greenald.
The till
was found to be £382 short while a stock take revealed food and drink
worth more than £200 was missing after the clash between Warrington
Wolves and Wigan Warriors at United’s ground on Saturday, October 8,
last year.

Mwila Bwanga and Olamide Oyawoye (Photo: Manchester Evening News) Questioning why the case ended up at the crown court, Judge
Lawton said: “Manchester United can just about afford it can’t they?”
Without
hearing mitigation, he handed all seven defendants a 12-month
conditional discharge, telling them: “You are all very foolish young
men, all given the opportunity to work with Manchester United. Most of
you come from a sporting backgrounds, studying sports science, and
doubtless you were quite excited at working and sometimes observing the
match, but you betrayed that trust by pilfering from the kiosk you were
tasked with working.”

Justino Edmilson (Photo: Manchester Evening News) None of the defendants had previous convictions, except for
Andrade, who was handed a referral order for a conviction for robbery
when he was 14.
After the case solicitor Amar Alyas, who
represented Belkhair and Oyawaye, said: “They are very remorseful but
this should have been dealt with by the district judge (in the
magistrates’ court). It’s unfortunate this had to waste precious crown
court time.”http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/manchester-united-can-afford-it-12886475

NWN : Want to go on a thieving spree ? Black up like Al Jolson and rob Asda or Tesco's. They can afford it ? Get off scot free . Result !

Friday, April 07, 2017

Steve Bannon 'calls Jared Kushner a cuck behind his back'

The former Breitbart boss has also reportedly called Donald Trump's son-in-law a 'globalist'

Steve Bannon is reportedly at loggerheads with Donald Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner
A rift has reportedly emerged between Donald Trump’s chief strategist, Steve Bannon and his son-in-law Jared Kushner.
The pair are believed to have clashed over opposing ideological visions for Mr Trump's White House. “[Steve] recently vented to us
about Jared being a ‘globalist’ and a ‘cuck'," an official who did not
wish to be named, told The Daily Beast website. "He actually said ‘cuck,’ as in “cuckservative.’”

“Cuckservative,” a portmanteau of
“cuckold” and “conservative,” has become a popular insult on the right
and is used as a sexually and racially charged version of “RINO,” an
acronym for “Republican In Name Only.” On its own the word cuckold means
a man whose wife has cheated on him, and was used frequently by William
Shakespeare.

“Globalist” is a term frequently used by
nationalist, pro-Trump right-wingers to attack political opponents but
the term has been criticised for carrying anti-Semitic undertones.
Mr Kushner is Jewish.

The official added: “There is a big fight going on. It’s all about
policy. There’s tension on trade, health care, immigration, taxes,
terrorism, you name it.”
Another official reportedly said that Mr Bannon “thinks Jared is
worse than a Democrat… Steve has a very specific vision for what he
believes, and what he shares with Trump. And he has for a long time now
seen (Mr Kushner) as a major obstacle to achieving that.”
Outlets including The New York Times reported that Mr Bannon
has considered resigning from the Trump team altogether following the
failure of two key policies he is believed to have orchestrated – the
travel ban against seven Muslim-majority nations and the repeal and
replacement of Obamacare.
Mr Bannon is reported to have said he “loves a gunfight” when asked about his relationship with Mr Kushner, according to Axios.

Wednesday, April 05, 2017

--------------------

Swedish terror group to visit the Warzone Centre

A Swedish Terror group called Revolutionary Front (RF) known for
attempted murders and inciting Muslims into huge city wide riots will be
visiting Belfast’s Warzone Centre on April 15th.
Our sources tell us that there will be a huge amount of ANTIFA/Irish
Republican activity surrounding the Veterans event on the 14th and that
the event on the 15th is more or less an opportunity to celebrate their
“victory” as they always do regardless how their day went. They intend
to use the event to display any trophies they have managed to snatch off
the old soldiers.
These RF terrorists are apparently here already and are attending
less openly militant events. It would be advisable for locals in that
area to make sure the road from Sandy Row to that centre is safe.
We will be contacting people to raise awareness and make provisions.
RF specialise in targeting individuals in home invasions and targeting
bars. So be on the watch for that kind of thing. RF’s members are mostly
Bosnian and Albanian child refugees from the 1990s conflict, a such
they are known to get stabby.
A documentary on RF.

NWN: Looks like the red filth are mobilising . There has been a clarion call for patriotic people to answer the call to support these veterans who will be wearing their medals . It appears that many in the Loyalist community will answer that call, thankfully . Word coming out from the Shankill and Sandy Row in particular, is that they will be turning out very strongly in numbers to support the veterans who, during 'the troubles', answered the call to serve in Northern Ireland. Many elected Officials are giving their support to the reason for the veterans protest at Belfast City Hall - the harassment of Northern Ireland veterans including dragging almost 80 year old veterans of the NI campaign through the Courts.

P.S. The last well known picture above, is in fact an IRA man in drag ! We kid you not. Check out the hands.